When the sickening – in gay lingo that’s good – “RuPaul’s Drag Race” returns on LogoTV for season four Jan. 30, we will be well represented.

Two South Florida female impersonators will be drag racing for the title of “America’s Next Drag Superstar” and, of course, the $100,000 prize money.

In addition to SoFlo’s Lashauwn Beyond and Latrice Royale, word has it that fans of the show can expect to see Jennifer Love Hewitt, Kelly Osbourne, Loretta Devine (“Grey’s Anatomy”), Jesse Tyler Ferguson (“Modern Family”) and Amber Riley (“Glee”).

Oh, and RuPaul is launching a footwear collection on March 15 with additional styles rolling out during the season, so expect some serious product placement on the show. The Iron Fist Drag Race Shoes will come in sizes 5-14 and retail between $75 to $90.

WHAT ABOUT THE STRAIGHT AUDIENCE: “This [RuPaul's Drag Race] is not just for the gay audience. This is just about people. It’s really all about accepting and loving yourself – be who you are.”

BACK STORY: “I moved here in 1992. I came here to be part of a dance troupe. I kind of fell in love with Florida. I was just coming out , learning how to be more accepting of myself.”

RUPAUL AUDITION: “I think it must have been around April-ish. I emailed them first. I basically let them know that I thought I could show them better than I could tell them. So I did an audition tape; it was very stripped down. It was just me: raw; uncut.”

HOW DO YOU THINK YOU COME OFF IN THE SHOW: “I haven’t seen anything edited, but I know for me for a fact people are going to love me. And people who have been hating on me are going to have to eat their words. I am a bundle of love.”

WHAT DO YOU HOPE TO GET OUT OF THE SHOW: “I want the world to see who I am as a person and hopefully they can relate to it; maybe they are going through something similar. And I want them to know to not give up on their dreams. I went in it for the prize money, I’m not going to lie. But my focus changed as to why I was there. It all shifted.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF RUPAUL NOW: “You don’t get too much time with him one on one. You have to do it quickly. But I feel RuPaul. I really do. I have a very good connection with him. I absolutely love and respect RuPaul.”

DESCRIBE YOURSELF IN A FEW WORDS: “Bizarre. Bigger than life. Theatrical. Exciting. I want to say super hero.”

HOME: Plantation, FL.

WHAT ABOUT THE STRAIGHT AUDIENCE: “I think a straight person watching the show will have more respect for us. They’ll see the struggle and it will remind them that we’re humans as well. I think the show gives a lot of straight people access to gay people, especially if you live – you know – in a part of the country where there aren’t a lot of gay people or gay bars.”

BACK STORY: I went to Piper High in Plantation. A lot of people there don’t know I do drag. I’ve only been doing drag for three years; I want to say two years when this all happened. As a matter of fact when I went to the airport to go to the show a friend of mine from high school was working at the airport. She didn’t know. So she asked me where I was going and I told her and I showed her some photos of me in drag. She was like, ‘Oh.’”

AUDITION: “I’ve wanted to audition when I was 20. But you had to be 21 or older. I believe I went out of the way. In my video I’m in the middle of the street. I made a backdrop. I went all out.”

HOW DO YOU THINK YOU COME OFF IN THE SHOW: “[The audience] will see I am a silent killer. I’m a very shy person, but I was there to take care of business.”

WHAT DO YOU HOPE TO GET OUT OF THE SHOW: “You go into the show expecting two or three things and you come out with a million.”

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF RUPAUL NOW: “I love RuPaul. I am so new to drag, so after the show I did some research. I had no idea RuPaul was such a superstar and how much of an inspiration he is to so many people.”